viernes, 14 de febrero de 2014


TWITTER DICE QUE VENEZUELA BLOQUEA SUS IMÁGENES 

El gobierno de Venezuela está bloqueando las imágenes en su sitio web de la última señal de una represión tras las violentas protestas que dejaron al menos a tres personas en la última semana. Los usuarios de Twitter han estado publicando sus fotos de las manifestaciones en las calles, ofreciendo una alternativa a los medios de comunicación estatales.


Twitter Says Venezuela Blocks Its Images Amid Protest Crackdown
Twitter Inc. (TWTR) said Venezuela’s government is blocking images on its website, the latest sign of a crackdown after violent protests that killed at least three people in the past week. Twitter users had been posting their photos of the street demonstrations, providing an alternative to state-run media. It’s unclear if photos are blocked in all Internet providers in Venezuela, said Nu Wexler, Twitter spokesman. Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro banned street demonstrations and ordered the arrest of opposition leaders after about 50,000 Venezuelan marched through Caracas to protest shortages of basic goods, creating clashes between protesters and government supporters.
Billy Vaisberg, director of an online directory of Venezuelan Twitter users called TwVen.com, said he had received several reports from people who couldn’t see images on their feeds today. In a post on its Spanish-language account, @twitter_es, Twitter advised Venezuelan users to subscribe to its text-message service to get updates. Maduro has accused mainstream media outlets of creating confusion. He took Colombian station NTN24 off the air and in a national address yesterday criticized Agence France Presse for “manipulating information.”
To contact the reporters on this story: Patricia Laya in Mexico City at playa2@bloomberg.net; Sarah Frier in San Francisco at sfrier1@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Nick Turner at nturner7@bloomberg.net

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